Hey, everyone! From those of you who've used nannies, I'm looking for any tips and happy stories you may have to help calm my nerves (whether the nannies in question speak your language or not). :-)
My husband and I are Americans living in Kyiv, Ukraine. I'm only 16-weeks pregnant at the moment, but I'm staring down the barrel of going back to work and handing my 3-month-old baby off to a Ukrainian nanny who will have her own Ukrainian child-rearing ideas that may or may not be compatible with our American ideas, and who may or may not speak any English. I have next to no Ukrainian, and though my Russian is decent, I'm not sure about my ability to convey nuances of how we'd like our child to be handled. I'm also totally wigged out at the prospect of leaving such a young child alone with a stranger all day with no oversight. I mean, odds are the nanny will be fantastic. But what if she's not? How would I know? :-\
I'm totally uneasy about this. I'm actually looking into the possibility of taking some extended time off to stay home with the baby until it's closer to a year old, but it may not work out. If I could feel more confident about the nanny thing, it would REALLY help me to navigate the HR labyrinth (and obviously would be a tremendous help if I do wind up going back to work so soon).
Thanks in advance, ladies!
Re: Nannies? That don't speak your language?
My experience with friends who have nannies here (in SG where it's very common) is that laying out the rules & expectations explicitly is very important. My cousin has a white board that has a schedule of what the nanny is to do during the day--otherwise, if left to her own devices, she ends up plopping the kid in front of the tv all day.
There are also loads of out-of-work young Ukrainians who speak excellent English. If English-speaking is a priority for you I imagine you will be able to find someone...especially if you are willing to pay a bit of a premium.
Good luck with everything. and I certainly second PP's idea to ask for personal recommendations.
What I hear from Lviv, actually, is that it's totally calm. Everyone there is basically on the same page, and 1/2 of them are camped out in Kyiv anyway. :-)
Oh, and totally, random (and I can't spell and absolutely can't write anything in Cyrillic) but I have been seriously obsessed with Pzata Hata--the chain, nothing really all that special, restaurant--since we were first there. If you haven't been yet, please go!